Re-Design Gone Bad at Greensboro News & Record

Well the Greensboro News & Record has launched the re-design of their website.  I’ve been out of town and haven’t been keeping up as much as I’d like with the Greensboro bloggers like Ed Cone, but I can’t imagine they have had nice things to say about it.

Now I know that any one person’s opinion about a design of any kind, whether it’s a website or a house, is a very subjective thing.  Some people like ranch style houses, others don’t.  But there are certain design elements that most people agree on:  with a house most people prefer that a doorway is high enough to walk through.

In the case of a website’s design you can look at several elements like color or font size and you’ll usually get some people that like it, and some that don’t.  But what most people expect from a website is a certain ease of use. They want to be able to find the information they’re looking for as quickly as possible and in this respect I think the N & R site fails.

Nr First you have the tab system on the home page, which is okay as a concept, but they have tabs in the middle and then other tabs at the top, and then other tabs on the left hand column.  What the hell is the hierarchy here? (See the picture at left; click on it for a larger version). That middle tab set goes away when you click through to articles, but since the home page is usually a site’s entryway I’d think you would want it to be a little easier to navigate.  One easy fix would be to get rid of the "Triad Marketplace" banner between the top tabs and the central tab window; that thing really screws up the eyes.

Now I have to say that I really don’t like the graphic design of the banners I’ve seen, and normally that wouldn’t bother me so much, but since they’ve decided to moonch them all together I feel like I’m looking at some kind of kindergarten collage project.  Has anyone at the N & R heard of white space?  And how about a design consistency?  There is literally no flow from one design element to the next.  Yuck.

As a testament to the design issues I offer this:  The main reason I started reading the N & R are the blogs and it took me quite a while to find them.  They are in another set of tabs (along with columnists and editorials) on the lower half of the home page, right-center.  But when I click through on editorials I can’t find any links from that page directly to the blogs.  Huh?

It looks like they aren’t done with the conversion to the new system (I’ll check their blogs for an update), but they are close enough to being done that I can tell you I don’t think they’ve done themselves any favors.  I hope whatever they gained on the back end (i.e. administrative side) was worth it.

**Update** I’ve checked the N&R blogs and it does seem to be the case that the site is pretty far from done.  Actually I don’t think any site is ever really done, so the folks at the N&R can definitely count on working on the site ad infinitum. 

On anothernot I’m kind of regretting the tone of some of my comments above, if for no other reason than the folks at N&R have taken on a monumental task and are obviously doing the best they can. The last thing they need is some snarky Monday-morning quarterbacking.

That said, I really hope they re-work their design templates so that the site is easier to read and navigate.

Knowing Your Market

If you’re going to open a coffee shop that doesn’t serve coffee, then doing so right outside the campus of Brigham Young University is probably the best place possible.

This story is getting a lot of notice for the obvious irony, but you have to be impressed with the owner.  Christin Johnson is a 22-year old English major at BYU and she opened Vermillion Skies De-cafe and Lounge six months ago.

Read the article and I think you’ll agree that she’s pretty creative about her business, and definitely worthy of the "Smart People" tag.

My buddy Rob should definitely stop by and have himself a non-caffeinated Coconut Ice Mochas during Cranky Hour (5-6 p.m.).

I’m Famous!

Okay, famous might be a little strong, but I did get interviewed for the Triad Business Journal, and they wrote it up in the Triad Talk section. You can read it here under the sub-head "Following a Leader."

The wildest thing about this to me is that I created the Winston-Salem Business blog on a lark, and it literally took me about 2 1/2 to 3 hours.  Then I went on vacation and came back to an email from a reporter who’d had the blog forwarded to him by somebody.  The reporter contacted me, interviewed me and the article appeared a week later.  If I had ever doubted blogs as a marketing or PR medium this would have settled it for me.

Another interesting thing about this is that I was interviewed by email, which from my understanding is becoming much more common these days.  From my perspective it’s good in the sense that it’s very hard to be mis-quoted this way, although I feel for someone being interviewed who doesn’t write much or doesn’t type well.  From the reporters perspective I’d think that you lose alot of the subtle meaning conveyed in tone you get with phone interviews, and non-verbal clues you get in face-to-face interviews.  But for something like this (pretty straightforward local business-interest piece) it’s a great way to go.

We’re #100, Kind Of

Money magazine has a list of the 100 best places to live in the United States.  Four towns in North Carolina made the list and one of them is Clemmons at #100.

My town, Lewisville, abuts Clemmons and my kids play little league baseball mostly with kids from Clemmons, so I guess you could say that Clemmons is kinda/sorta my backyard.

Only one of the many towns in Northern Virginia (DC suburbs) made the list: Vienna, VA came in at #4 on the list.

Check out this comparison between Clemmons and Vienna:

Average Home Price:
Clemmons: $160,890
Vienna: $510,987

Median Household Income:
Clemmons: $64,115
Vienna: $111,877

So if you look at the home price as the multiple of the average household income in Clemmons the average home price is 2.5 times the median annnual household income.  In Vienna the multiple is 4.6.

Here’s another way to look at it: If you bought the house in Vienna with a 20% downpayment, 30 year fixed mortgage at 6% your monthly mortgage payment would be $2,451.  Using the same variables your payment in Clemmons would be $772.

I thought about trying to calculate the average net income of each household with x number of exemptions, but i’m not that smart so I’m going to use the gross income on a monthly basis. This also works because if both households are "married filing jointly" their federal tax rate is the same.  For VIenna the median gross househlold income is $9,323 per month and for Clemmons it’s $5,343.

So your mortgage payment in Vienna is a little more than 26% of your gross, and in Clemmons it’s a little under 14.5%.

I was already happy about the move, but now…

Check out Billy the Blogging Poet

If you haven’t been there yet you should visit Billy the Blogging Poet, and I’m not saying this because he recently gave me a lot of love on the Blogsboro blog.

Billy’s a true renaissance man and I’ve enjoyed reading his blog since I started this whole blogging adventure.  I’m also quite embarassed that I left him off my list of Smart People until now.

Billy’s also the driving force behind:
Blogsboro.com
LaureatesKids.com

For Those Who Think Basketball Isn’t a Contact Sport

I’ve always hated when people call basketball a non-contact sport.  My wife can tell you I used to come home from the gym looking like I’d been mugged after an hour or two of serious hoops.

But I feel like a wuss compared to this 10-year old Australian boy who had both his hands and a foot severed in a basketball mishap:

Terry Vo was seriously injured when the wall supporting a basketball ring fell on him during a friend’s birthday party at Easter.

The guttering severed his hands and his left foot. Surgeons re-attached his limbs, but his foot had to be amputated nine days later.

He now has a prosthetic lower leg and foot.

You can read the full story here.

Another Form of “Citizens Journalism”

The aftermath of the bombings in London were caught on video and in pictures by people using the video and picture capabilities of their mobile phones.  The BBC has a collection of the videos here and discusses the "pocket journalism" here.

Dana Blankenhorn also discusses this new phenomenon here, and makes this observation about what it means to the media industry:

"This is a huge contrast to the past, where professionals delivered most of the images, and those who were lucky enough to get early shots would auction them off.

This also means that it will become increasingly difficult for disasters to "hide." Countries like Saudi Arabia have found it impossible to ban camera phones, which will now be deployed wherever news happens.

The front-end of the news business model, the payment for collecting the data, disappeared yesterday. That’s temporary.

The race will now be on among media to publicize their willingness to take such files, the addresses of such files, the wide distribution offered on the files and (what will make the difference) prompt payment for those files."

One Part Google Maps, One Part Census, and Voila!

Here’s a neat site called gCensus.com that combined Google Maps and Census data to make a cool way to get find basic census data. 

I was easily able to find that Forsyth County, NC (where I’ve lived for a year has:

Land: 409.6 sq. miles
Water: 3.3 sq. miles
Population: 306,067
Houses: 133,093

While my old home of Prince William County, VIrginia has:

Land: 337.8 sq. miles
Water: 10.6 sq. miles
Population: 280,813
Houses: 98,052

Kind of cool.